What a fabulous loft in Moscow. The owner, Alexander, is a civil engineer who thinks it’s better to preserve older buildings than build new ones. The building was used as a tenement house, and in the Soviet years there were both housing and offices.
A hole in the wall looks into the kitchen, an area that has not yet been finished, and Alexander will deal with it later.
Alexander received his glass kitchen from friends - the owners of the furniture showroom.
The intrusion into architecture was minimal, the windows even have old frames, and the layout has not changed either. To maintain authenticity, he made open wiring and installed retro radiators, and mixed modern furniture and antiques in the setting. He decided to isolate the bedroom, and as a result, there are no windows, but a loft is for living outside the rules.
Even when it is necessary to build something new in the house, for example, the the bathroom, Alexander uses used materials: Glass blocks and a paneled door, on which several layers of old paint have survived.
https://www.admagazine.ru/interior/loft-v-kadashevskih-palatah#article













